As many of you know, we blog factory tours. You do see that sort of content elsewhere, but never as much as I’ve always assumed would flow from the vast universe of panting bloggers hovering over their keyboards like children picking ice cream flavors. But here is a terrific one, check out the camera to end all cameras.

I’ve been considering destinations for an April ski touring trip, with Europe in mind. Classic tours in the Alps are appealing, but we have heard wonderful things about the Pyrenees mountains, both France and Spain parts. Anyone suggest a classic hut-to-hut tour?

Downer. It’s announced that no new sports will be added to the 2022 winter Olympics — thus ruining our hopes for skimo. More here. We were optimistic we’d be personal friends with a few skimo athletes and perhaps even travel to the Games for WildSnow press credentialed coverage. Shucks, I guess we’ll go anyway and fake it as curling journalists.

As a new wrinkle on ice bowling, curling mixed doubles made it into this winter’s Games and will presumably go again at the 2022 melee. Some of you may fail to believe it, but your friendly blogger actually did some curling in high school, when he came to the cruel reality that his ice hockey skills were not up to par. A sore tailbone was the only result, though he can testify it’s funner than it looks. I remain a skilled sweeper.

I’m beginning to feel we need a WildSnow cannabis category, as we do originate in Colorado. Not that we’re advocating or going crazy with consumption, it’s just interesting as North American mountain towns have never been strangers to the leaf. Latest, during last tax period in Aspen town they actually sold more money’s worth of legal pot products than liquor store booze. That’s in my opinion quite an interesting economic factoid. More here.

Do you drink backcountry creek water direct from the stream, no purification? I’m of the opinion, based on a lot of experience, that doing so is unwise unless you’re in a very special place, for example quaffing a burbling brook in the high mountains of Norway. Slate magazine published a controversial article attempting to debunk the practice of wilderness water treatment. In my opinion a ridiculous effort at clickbait. So I won’t link to it (smile). Discover published a good rebuttal.

Can’t leave a news roundup untouched by climate change. It’s amusing (and in the end sad) reading all the hand wringing about geo-engineering, that when we’re sitting here inadvertently engineering the climate every single second of every day.

I don’t pretend to be an expert on climate engineering and by no means am I advocating. But googling reveals an amazing amount of negativity regarding what could possibly get us out of the relentless march of global warming. It is strange to me that we can accidentally engineer our way into badness, but won’t devote extensive resources researching tools that might open the door to goodness. Truly, it sounds like some rich guy could just buy his own island and pump sulfur dioxide into the air for a few months, solve the problem. Your thoughts?

Oh, and more climate content. Thanks to one of our commenters, my attention is directed to this Vox interview with Paul Hawken listing what might actually be most effective in curing global warming. “Population control” advocates of course repeat ad nauseam “overpopulation is the problem” and there is logical truth to that — but the solutions always appear draconian (we need a new virus!).

Sounding a more reasonable note, Hawken claims that the simple acts of educating girls and family planning are easily up there in the top ten, due to mitigation of the population issue. Of course “education” and “planning” can easily trend to the draconian (e.g., China’s one-child policy, or the act of “educating” someone who’s beliefs don’t align). In any case, interesting to see this on the list and how the semantics evolve.

Bonus video find. Below is oddly compelling. Along the lines of “what will humans do?”

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Comments

Hi!
In April at Pyrenees you’ll need to find altitude. Best place should be Central Pyrenees. Our area, Benasque Valley (Spain) is surrounded by several Peaks of +3000m , including Aneto (highest peak of the mountain range with 3440m).
From here, you can reach easily nearby valleys like Aran or Gavarnie (France).

Great link to the Hasselblad factory tour.
Regarding geo-engineering, have you read Gwynne Dyer’s Climate Wars? In his typical syte, Dyer outlines many terrifying scenarios when rougue elements start geo-engineering even the one you outline. Not sure I have much hope we’ll solve or fix the problem. The possibilities of unintended consequences of us trying to engineer our way doing the ‘right’ thing are huge.
For climate change, I believe its a matter of mitigation in engineering/design of infrastructure. Fire-proof buildings, flood mitigation in urban design, water & energy storage on a household/neighborhood level etc. I draw much inspiration from the ideas of permaculture in this regard.

In general “one rich guy” solving everything is an idea we ought to dispense with. It doesn’t work (notwithstanding Elon Musk’s Tesla in space, which I gotta admit is pretty cool. I’d rather it’d been original Dynafit bindings in space, though).,

See
February 13th, 2018 7:31 pm

“Hand wringing” suggest those with reservations about the advisability of large scale geo-engineering are not responding rationally. It implies that opposition to geo-engineering is based on emotion not logic. Emotions can be quite valid and correct, but to characterize opposition to geo-engineering as “hand wringing” is a rhetorical trick to diminish strong arguments with which one disagrees. To characterize the scientists in the linked Atlantic article as engaged in “hand-wringing” would be disingenuous to say the least. (And googling reveals an amazing amount of negativity about pretty much anything.)

#Rod Yeah, you’ll find lot of colours and steep drops, with technical ascents in the area. Benasque and Vielha (the two main villages of the Benasque and Aran Valleys) are at only 1h by car, and opens a big universe of peaks and couloirs. You also can easily reach french areas, like Piau Engaly.

It hasn’t had time to become a classic yet. But April should be prime time to do Høgruta in Jotunheimen, Norway. I haven’t done the trip myself but I’ve done a lot of touring in the area and several of the mountains on the trip, it is a really nice area.

Joseph
February 14th, 2018 5:17 am

You should do the Albula Alps Traverse. They have such a good base now in that part of Switzerland that April will still be very good.

April is a bit late for the Pyrenees no?

Pablo
February 14th, 2018 7:54 am

Hi Lou,
Central Pyrenees is my playground, I live in a city 1:30h long and have a vacation house in Biescas a pyrenean village.
If you want info or even guidance don’t hesitate to email me. I usually tour with some friens who are experienced mountain guides how known every spot.

Spring skiing in april at Pyrenees is a real pleasure!!
Come visit us!!

Pablo

Lisa Dawson
February 14th, 2018 8:16 am

Lou, you’re always full of surprises. I’m thrilled to hear you are a skilled sweeper. The kitchen is waiting.

Hello Pablo, if we do this I’ll contact you! And thanks everyone else for the tips. If we visit EU this year it’ll probably be more towards middle of April or even end of April, so we might have to skip anything that could be too warm. We shall see. Wouldn’t mind trying the Otztal again since we got weathered off it the last time. But that’s crowded. Lou

+1 on Benasque or Garvanie on the French side if you’re after the Pyrenees. Less developed and therefore less crowded than the Alps. Europes last wilderness(?)I’ve not been that late in the year though but Pablo sounds like he knows what he’s about!
Personally I’d be thinking somewhere higher. Bernese Oberland, Zermatt or Saas Fee..bag a couple of 4000s.

Casey
February 19th, 2018 10:11 pm

I’m going to do the Haute Route in a month, I hear its great.

On another note should I detune my new Solomon S/Lab Minims? Taking them to Gothic Mountain Tour and the Grand Traverse.

Not sure exactly what you mean Casey, but most skis can benefit from some thought to what part of the edges don’t need to be razor sharp. Lou

Patrick
February 21st, 2018 11:17 am

On a fall visit, we lingered in St Girons (France), at the eastern edge of the Pyrenees. Its Saturday market gave me a sense that St Girons is France’s version of Nelson BC. At the market, all the young and old hippies came out of the hills to peddle their produce, cheese, crafts (etc), make music, and kibitz. Colourful, fun. Worth a visit if you’re in the area.

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Welcome to Louis (Lou) Dawson's backcountry skiing information & opinion website. Lou's passion for the past 50 years has been alpinism, climbing, mountaineering and skiing -- along with all manner of outdoor recreation. He has authored numerous books and articles about ski touringand is well known as the first person to ski down all 54 of Colorado's 14,000-foot peaks, otherwise known as the Fourteeners! Books and free ski touring news and information here.

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